Have you ever looked at the wonders of the James Webb Space Telescope and thought, ‘I wish I could do that’?
It’s pretty cool to see astronomy pros and hobbyists alike share some of their incredible shots of the pretty things up top in the Astronomy Photographer of the Year awards.
Sifting through the public James Webb Space Telescope datasets, stargazers across the planet have been hard at work.
The first image was shown to the world on Monday, but little did we know that NASA would be releasing other amazing photos from the first batch throughout yesterday.
The 2022 shortlisted images are nothing short of spectacular, from a mesmerising moonrise moment over an ancient English tower to a surreal shot of the Milky Way above the highest highway in the world.
The competition has been running for 13 years out of The Royal Observatory Greenwich, with more than 4 500 entries this year.
At a distance of 628 million kilometres from Earth, NASA’s Juno spacecraft has sent us some dreamy snaps of Jupiter’s surface.
The shortlisted photographs in The Royal Observatory Greenwich’s 13th Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition are so beautiful that it’s hard to believe they’re real.
The folks over at Mashable have put together their 31 best entrants to the Insight Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2016, and we have chosen five.